Bell's Fishery of Mackinaw City, Mich., on Oct. 25 recalled all packages of Bell's Whitefish Pate because the product contains undeclared egg, soy, and milk products.
The recalled Bell's Whitefish Pate was only sold in Michigan.
The product comes in an 8-ounce or 16-ounce plastic container marked with lot #100607, expiration date 10-20-07, or lot #100807, expiration date 10-28-07.
No Illnesses have been reported.
Production of the pate has been suspended until U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and Bell's Fishery authorities are certain that the labeling problem has been corrected.
Rhode IslandHospital researchers report that findings from a new study of retail meat in the Providence, R.I. area indicate little to no presence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. The study, prompted by the identification of such organisms in retail meat in Canada, Europe and Asia, is among the first in this country to look at the possible spread of infection through retail ...
COLUMBIA, Mo. – Widespread reports had most people afraid to eat tomatoes this summer and when tomatoes were vindicated, eating peppers became a fear. A University of Missouri food safety expert says there is only so much that can be done to assure produce is safe to eat.“We basically want perfect food, but produce is not sterile,” said Andrew Clarke, ...
OLYMPIA, Wash. -- State health officials believe alfalfa sprouts are connected to an outbreak of Salmonella that’s sickened nine people in our state and four in Oregon.The outbreak has been tied to alfalfa sprouts from Sprouters Northwest, Inc. in Kent. The company has agreed to voluntarily recall the product and has stopped distributing it. The sprouts are sold in a ...
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced a final rule on Aug. 22 amending the food additive regulations to provide for the safe use of ionizing radiation for the control of foodborne pathogens and extension of shelf-life in fresh iceberg lettuce and fresh spinach. FDA has determined that this use of ionizing radiation will not adversely affect the safety of ...
A new study in SCI's Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture shows that konjac gum and sesame seed extract may offer protection against different strains of E. coli and Salmonella bacteria.The study by Dr. Petra Becker and colleagues from Wageningen University and Research Centre, The Netherlands, shows that these foodstuffs act as binders for E. coli and Salmonella ...
Bacteria and viruses are the microscopic organisms – otherwise known as germs -- that are responsible for causing and transmitting illness and disease. These microbes are so small, that according to the American Society for Microbiology, if the smallest of all microbes was the size of a baseball, an average bacterium would then be the size of the pitcher's mound, and just one of the millions of cells that make up your body would be the size of the ballpark!